However, the company
Interestingly, Microsoft has been a big software supporter of the Mac OS from the beginning. I remember when Bill Gates made a commitment to write for the Mac at an event back in 1984. To this day Microsoft has kept that promise to support it with its Office suite of products.
But that is where Gates' support ends. Microsoft has decided not to make an Office version for iOS. I find this a bit odd since iPads are outselling Macs six to one and they have pretty much become the de facto standard in the enterprise
Perhaps Microsoft should consider the Evernote model. While it does not have a spreadsheet or presentation program, it does have a word processing and notebook management tool available on almost any device, be it an iPhone or Galaxy S 4, iPad or Android tablet, PC or Mac. There is a local version that resides on each device so I can use it when not connected. Once it gets a connection, it accesses the cloud and syncs all my devices.
If Microsoft had foresight it would have been the Evernote for consumers and businesses. It could have created an app platform across all devices and tied it to the cloud instead of giving Apple, Google, and Evernote the chance to own the customers that use its products. It could have made Office a cross-platform productivity tool that gives its competitors' customers access to a suite that they already know and love.
I realize that Office is still a cash cow for Microsoft but that revenue stream will dry up as more and more of us move to alternative tools that work on our multitude of devices. Microsoft could have given a basic version free to everyone and then charged heavy users a subscription fee for the full version in the cloud. This strategy would ensure Office longevity because the current local version will become less important to businesses and consumers alike.
In the short term I suppose it makes sense to milk the cow dry, but by not creating a cross-platform version Microsoft will force people who use iOS and Android toward alternative tools. As they get used to using them instead of Office, demand for Office will decline in the long run.
I see this short-term thinking at Microsoft as a real blunder. In the not-to-distant future
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